<v Speaker 1>Jared, Katie and Josh.
<v Speaker 2>Well, as you go wandering into the office today, you
<v Speaker 2>come rolling up and you make your way into your cube.
<v Speaker 2>Uh you know, there's a bunch of kids running around.
<v Speaker 2>Just the heads up, it's take your daughters and sons
<v Speaker 2>to work day today, So you might have a bunch
<v Speaker 2>of rugrats running around your office with the parents considering
<v Speaker 2>what they want to do when they grow up. Don't
<v Speaker 2>grow up kids, it's a trap.
<v Speaker 3>Don't do it.
<v Speaker 1>Don't listen to.
<v Speaker 3>It's not fun. Wouldn't it be funny?
<v Speaker 2>Though? Like if you're going in for surgery today though,
<v Speaker 2>and you're sitting there and your surgeon comes wandering in
<v Speaker 2>with their eight year old. This is Braxton. He's gonna
<v Speaker 2>help with the surgery today.
<v Speaker 1>He's been practicing on his little stuffy.
<v Speaker 2>You gonna put the gas on you to knock you
<v Speaker 2>out going in for a filling, and Braxton's there.
<v Speaker 1>Okay.
<v Speaker 3>So good.
<v Speaker 2>Of companies today offer special programming and tours and presentations
<v Speaker 2>and stuff for the kiddos.
<v Speaker 3>I know, Lockheed Martin is a big one. They put
<v Speaker 3>on a great day for the kids.
<v Speaker 2>Uh you know, And they're saying in this story that
<v Speaker 2>you should allow your kids to sit in on meetings
<v Speaker 2>and watch projects. Give them simple tasks like organizing things
<v Speaker 2>or replying to all staff emails.
<v Speaker 3>That would probably be a big one.
<v Speaker 1>Oh my goodness, let them reply to the email.
<v Speaker 3>It would also be funny.
<v Speaker 2>Is if you wanted into the office today and somebody
<v Speaker 2>had their like forty year old kid sitting there. Oh yeah,
<v Speaker 2>like on a tablet, like sitting in the corner of
<v Speaker 2>the office. Yeah, it's bright blue tablet.
<v Speaker 3>We're just playing roll blocks. Guys, shut up, leave me alone. Unch.
<v Speaker 1>It's the worst ever.
<v Speaker 2>I actually brought my daughter in today to the radio
<v Speaker 2>station because I was like, this is kind of a
<v Speaker 2>cool job.
<v Speaker 1>It's fun.
<v Speaker 3>He then half asleep over there the entire morning.
<v Speaker 1>Huh, come here, it's early though. Everybody say, I.
<v Speaker 3>Got a question for you. Who do you love more?
<v Speaker 3>Me or your mom?
<v Speaker 1>I can't answer that, no answer right now.
<v Speaker 3>I love you both the same.
<v Speaker 4>Here.
<v Speaker 3>What's been the best part so far? I don't know nothing.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, she's so cute. Last night she packed her little
<v Speaker 2>lunch and everything so she could have something to.
<v Speaker 3>I guess would be breakfast right now.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, And I was telling Katie off the air, it's
<v Speaker 2>like I don't have to worry about what she eats
<v Speaker 2>at all, because she's like, I'm gonna pack some tomatoes
<v Speaker 2>and cucumbers. Yeah, like she has all these healthy snacks,
<v Speaker 2>some pineapple.
<v Speaker 1>It's her brother.
<v Speaker 5>You said it was the sweet tooth, So yeah, he's
<v Speaker 5>one you gotta.
<v Speaker 1>Look out for.
<v Speaker 3>Hey, guess what, kidd you only got about two more hours. Okay, yeah,
<v Speaker 3>she goes, I'm so tired. I'm so tired.
<v Speaker 2>I was like, this is why daddy's generally grumpy around
<v Speaker 2>for in the afternoon.
<v Speaker 3>Right now, we know, Okay.
<v Speaker 5>I told her several times I making naps on the
<v Speaker 5>couch in the office.
<v Speaker 1>I told you to go in there. You just let
<v Speaker 1>us know.
<v Speaker 3>So funny.
<v Speaker 2>We'll say hi all the kiddos today for take your
<v Speaker 2>kiddo to work day today. Now, speaking of children, I
<v Speaker 2>heard something this morning that I was shocked by because
<v Speaker 2>Josh is a grown ass man who generally I feel like,
<v Speaker 2>is still a child.
<v Speaker 3>How have you never heard of the refresh cycle?
<v Speaker 1>Oh yeah, I know.
<v Speaker 2>He was complaining about his T shirt speed wrinkly and
<v Speaker 2>it was all wrinkly. Yeah, and Katie goes, just put
<v Speaker 2>it in the dryer on the refrash Yeah, how do
<v Speaker 2>you not know?
<v Speaker 3>How have you gone this far and not known about
<v Speaker 3>the refresh cycle? I truly don't know. I just have
<v Speaker 3>no idea.
<v Speaker 4>I just washed my clothes and then I dry them,
<v Speaker 4>and then I fold them and I put him in
<v Speaker 4>a drawer or hang him up like I didn't know,
<v Speaker 4>because I didn't know that you could just throw it
<v Speaker 4>into the dryer when it's not wet, yeah, and just
<v Speaker 4>take the wrinkles out.
<v Speaker 3>Yes, how was you? How have you made it this far?
<v Speaker 5>And it's funny because your comment was actually I'm not
<v Speaker 5>gonna iron a T shirt.
<v Speaker 1>I'm like, yeah, nobody does you throw it in the dryer.
<v Speaker 2>I've iron T shirts before OCD. When it comes to
<v Speaker 2>throw generally, I will say I will probably four out
<v Speaker 2>of five week nights I've thrown stuff into that refreshes pants, shirts, everything.
<v Speaker 2>You know.
<v Speaker 3>It's funny.
<v Speaker 2>Actually I threw some stuff in two days ago, and
<v Speaker 2>it was like a week's worth of shirts and pants,
<v Speaker 2>and I must have been tripping or something, because I
<v Speaker 2>went and opened up the dryer when it was all done.
<v Speaker 2>Two of the shirts I threw in with hangers on
<v Speaker 2>still oh, and that pair of pants was a new
<v Speaker 2>pair of pants and I left the tags on it,
<v Speaker 2>the little sticky on the leg and everything. My mind
<v Speaker 2>must have been just somewhere else because I just threw
<v Speaker 2>it all in the dryer, and I was, you know,
<v Speaker 2>at one point, I was like, why is it clunking
<v Speaker 2>so much?
<v Speaker 3>Did the hangers melt?
<v Speaker 5>No?
<v Speaker 3>They both snapped though, Oh they snapped in half. But
<v Speaker 3>I was like, what was I thinking? I just was
<v Speaker 3>like there, like a total autopilot.
<v Speaker 2>But yeah, if you're a man child like Josh, generally
<v Speaker 2>a lot of dryers have the refresh site.
<v Speaker 3>Ok, I gotta see if mine does. Now, Oh yeah,
<v Speaker 3>sure it does. It's not just spray it with water.
<v Speaker 1>It's almost or you just put it out like twenty
<v Speaker 1>minutes and you're good, like dryer sheet in there.
<v Speaker 3>You won't look like a slob at work.
<v Speaker 5>It's funny to me, though, the things that people don't
<v Speaker 5>know about washing clothes. Did you see the story about
<v Speaker 5>washing towels and how often you're supposed to do it?
<v Speaker 1>So we are not doing it right.
<v Speaker 5>A bunch of doctors got together and figured out exactly
<v Speaker 5>how much we should be washing our towels.
<v Speaker 3>Hey I'm a towel doctor.
<v Speaker 5>Yeah, Like how much do you wash your towels when
<v Speaker 5>you think about it, Like I used to be a
<v Speaker 5>new towel every time I shower.
<v Speaker 2>Really a new towel every time before you can use
<v Speaker 2>it like three times, okay, probably three to four times. Okay,
<v Speaker 2>it gets that smell.
<v Speaker 1>You are probably one of the only people I've ever met.
<v Speaker 5>Who guessed it right, because most people I know they
<v Speaker 5>do it for a week. They use their towels for
<v Speaker 5>a week, and on Sunday you wash all your towels.
<v Speaker 1>That's how I was raised.
<v Speaker 5>Do you just like with your towels in your sheets
<v Speaker 5>on Sunday? That's what Sunday's for. But you're right, Jeremy,
<v Speaker 5>it's every three to four days. And they're talking about
<v Speaker 5>just the build up that can accumulate on your skin
<v Speaker 5>and towels.
<v Speaker 1>But they will they lean into that, and not only that,
<v Speaker 1>but rying they're.
<v Speaker 5>Saying, like when you are done with your towel, you
<v Speaker 5>know those people who put it on the floor and
<v Speaker 5>they don't hang it up.
<v Speaker 1>They drive me crazy. We have hooks, yeah, exactly, because like.
<v Speaker 5>The moisture can cause mold and that is so bad
<v Speaker 5>for your skin.
<v Speaker 1>How about the people who share bath towels.
<v Speaker 5>Now, I'm sure this is like in big families where
<v Speaker 5>you just put the towel back up and then someone
<v Speaker 5>will grab it from the hook, you know, and just
<v Speaker 5>not even think about it. Usually this is kids who
<v Speaker 5>do this, right, Like kids will use somebody else's bath towel.
<v Speaker 3>No, don't.
<v Speaker 1>That's like one of the worst things that they say
<v Speaker 1>you could.
<v Speaker 5>Do as far as just sharing it, because there are
<v Speaker 5>certain infections that can.
<v Speaker 1>Be spread this way.
<v Speaker 3>Dephlococcus.
<v Speaker 4>I know.
<v Speaker 5>I had no idea infections could be spread by towels.
<v Speaker 5>And the biggest thing, the biggest thing they say they
<v Speaker 5>found from this is using the towel that you wipe
<v Speaker 5>off your body also wiping off your face with it.
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, like that is drying off like you wouldn't think.
<v Speaker 5>Like for me in my mind, I'm like, well, my
<v Speaker 5>whole body's clean, I'm gonna wipe off my face and
<v Speaker 5>then everything else after.
<v Speaker 3>Right, you've seen those towels.
<v Speaker 1>Oh, they're saying you something separate.
<v Speaker 2>When you open them up. Half the towel is white
<v Speaker 2>and half the towel is brown. There's a line in
<v Speaker 2>the middle uppers white, yeah, bottoms bread And they say
<v Speaker 2>that is a good indicator of the lower half of
<v Speaker 2>the brown.
<v Speaker 3>Yes, and then the white you use on the upper
<v Speaker 3>part of your.
<v Speaker 5>Body, which they're saying is good, like you should do that,
<v Speaker 5>you should have separate drying apparatuses for your face, and
<v Speaker 5>you're right. So I had no idea all this stuff
<v Speaker 5>with towels until I read this article.
<v Speaker 2>And then I was like, okay, and you're supposed to
<v Speaker 2>be replacing them like every couple of years, because I
<v Speaker 2>was drying off the other day.
<v Speaker 3>And one of them did smell a little funny.
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, And I was like, I think I've had this
<v Speaker 2>towel since like oh four Oh yeah.
<v Speaker 1>No, I've got some that I've been hanging on to
<v Speaker 1>for and I don't know why. Yeah, I don't know why.
<v Speaker 2>That's why I put them in the garage. And like
<v Speaker 2>these are now car towels. Yeah, like if I wash
<v Speaker 2>my car that you need to Yeah, I don't want.
<v Speaker 3>This steph wia coccus on my face. You don't know,
<v Speaker 3>but walk out your towels. People. Thanks for all the
<v Speaker 3>great information, Katie, welcome. You really tapped into towels
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